Well, it's an access point. We used to call them a holding platoon; we all had them. Once they know you're going to be released, you are posted over to the JPSU, literally, from your home unit. That allows your unit now to bring somebody in behind you. Before, the units would have up to 90 people on categories, so they've created this organization you go to. Again, it's, “Come in and report.” It's almost like being in the old unemployment system. You had to come in every week to say, “Hi. Are there any jobs?” They'd say, “No”, and away you go.
People get what they want out of it. Some don't; some do. A lot of them are just satisfied that they don't have to go into their unit anymore, and they're just waiting for the day when they're let go. It's pretty grim, when you talk to the fellas. There is no enthusiasm in actually being there. It has a detrimental sort of feeling to it. It's another step. You've lost your unit, the guys you served with. You're with a bunch of people you don't know. Next thing you know, you are transitioning out to a civilian world that you don't know.